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Acetone production with metabolically engineered strains of Acetobacterium woodii

Authors :
Marzena Gerdom
Hatice Öztürk
Ralf-Jörg Fischer
Frank R. Bengelsdorf
Hubert Bahl
Sebastian Flüchter
Sonja Linder
Sabrina Hoffmeister
Peter Dürre
Wilfried Blümke
Antje May
Source :
Metabolic Engineering. 36:37-47
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

Expected depletion of oil and fossil resources urges the development of new alternative routes for the production of bulk chemicals and fuels beyond petroleum resources. In this study, the clostridial acetone pathway was used for the formation of acetone in the acetogenic bacterium Acetobacterium woodii . The acetone production operon (APO) containing the genes thlA (encoding thiolase A), ctfA / ctfB (encoding CoA transferase), and adc (encoding acetoacetate decarboxylase) from Clostridium acetobutylicum were cloned under the control of the thlA promoter into four vectors having different replicons for Gram-positives (pIP404, pBP1, pCB102, and pCD6). Stable replication was observed for all constructs. A. woodii [pJIR_act thlA ] achieved the maximal acetone concentration under autotrophic conditions (15.2±3.4 mM). Promoter sequences of the genes ackA from A. woodii and pta-ack from C. ljungdahlii were determined by primer extension (PEX) and cloned upstream of the APO. The highest acetone production in recombinant A. woodii cells was achieved using the promoters P thlA and P pta-ack . Batch fermentations using A. woodii [pMTL84151_act thlA ] in a bioreactor revealed that acetate concentration had an effect on the acetone production, due to the high K m value of the CoA transferase. In order to establish consistent acetate concentration within the bioreactor and to increase biomass, a continuous fermentation process for A. woodii was developed. Thus, acetone productivity of the strain A. woodii [pMTL84151_act thlA ] was increased from 1.2 mg L −1 h −1 in bottle fermentation to 26.4 mg L −1 h −1 in continuous gas fermentation.

Details

ISSN :
10967176
Volume :
36
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Metabolic Engineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ebba909b3009443011d0596524fc2704